Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 16, 1916, Page 19

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Homemaker happy. Toasters, Tea Kettles, Pie Plate Holders, Casseroles, Trivet Trays, Gifts of Silve and Nickelware Make the Housekeeper and Coffee Percolators, are a few of the many B | The Plaut-Cadden Co. [FERH | |coin s ion & SeTunsd: amy Teritieation and wacorsa” soicls WE SELL AT LOWER PRICES THAN ELSEWHERE ! Jewelers Established 1872 water and how many of organi= mat- | Possitle introduction of some fertiliz- 3 Plaut-Cadden Building OPEN EVENINGS Women’s and Children’s Kid Gloves, Silk Hosiery, Bath Robes, Kimonos, Dressing Sacques, Brassieres, Dainty Handkerchiefs and Aprons, Um- brellas, Neckwear, Boudoir Caps, Angora Scarf and Cap Sets, Men’s ‘and Women's Knitted Scarfs, Sweaters and Toques, Red Leather and Beaded Bags, Silk Petticoats, Etc., Etc. ‘-Is““'m‘u}‘i‘.“{finflfi‘l‘ you Z‘Lfiy Novertheless, In o laudable desire to 2 2 B S S T R T S Y 101 Main Street, Norwich many of wood ash and how many of | Problem, the New York station has 4 . trates, phosp! ), cates, me, 3 < % sofl fi as different farms. Zoda “megnexium, iron. eulphur, eic: | Soil from se mavy alffernt 'farms We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps are made up of. mine exactly what elements they con- 9 3 Likewise he can take a handful of | tained, and then, for two years, raised CHEMICAL ANALYSIS DISCLOSES A FEW THINGS, NOT EVERYTHING (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) The chemist can take a !‘s:ndtu‘. o: much practical bearing on the mys- tery of why and how the crop grows. ' | decimal fraction how many grams of | With distilled water (to obviate the ter and how many %t ev mineral | Ing_impurity in the water.) gonatituent are contained¥in those| Some of the results are rather cur- hundred grams of soil. A N- : - = si 518" hit lt‘he Ganst dge ot 4 aturally the s varied very | disease and then prescril medicine w:”:b;'e"t;“’f,n:‘i‘:':s‘;;(.“’]u‘s; v Are | widely in composition, They ran from | for that, nol for something clse. does 1. I 18 “all Creex™ to ™ Bug | 64 1o 80 per cent, silicon,—ths latter| The proof of the pudding js still in know he does it, Just as certainiy | P6IDE a sandy loam from Lo~ Island. |the cating. : ¢ om oo g & Y | The water and organic mattcr in them THE FARMER. as we know that there arc people to vari:d from two and a quarter to eight Thom Call Greek” is - thelr', mother | 14", gnnrter per contl the tooeet b tongue; as simple and easily .compre- this respect being again t Long hénsinle as Connecticut Tnslish 1 0] faiang moll. In. Sitmers hiy oo us, though we find their (all . unin- | ~and Soit | 242 ‘por gm Lg" Tor UHeiDIe sitberigh. . land again fusnishing the lowe In Py potash they ran from .27 to 1.95 per Very well, then: if thjs agricultural | cens. and in phosphoric acid from 12 . chemist can find out exactly what alto .24 per cent., Longeisland again be- (Continued from Page Six) crop takes out of the soil, e hOW ling lowest in both. Naturally, you'd = 2 many pounds of nitrogen, how many |expect this Long Island soil fo pro- | Urally wants to grew: try your fertil- of sphorus, how many of putash,|duce pretty poor crops, unfertilized. | iZIng formulas t¥l ycu find one that how many of lime, etc., to every bush- | Ang that is just what happene In | the prunes. Beit . thoroughly and ¢l of corn; and if ne can find out|two years the total weight of the bar. |St2nd on the ice to chill. Serve in how many pounds of these ssme ele- |ley crop its test plat produced was |individual glasses §r paper cases with “Just as the twig is bent the tree's|for though her window may be untidy inclined.” o she belongs to the clan and for that As a rtule her geraniums are last|reason I cannot let her go- z tall, with much foliage. Therc| “What do you suppose is the prico leaves upon them | of the rare and beautiful plants we sce lowed to remain}at the Horist's?” she asks. naming until quite faded ‘and sere. I just long al choice varieties. : to go about that plant stand and Fiternal vigilance,” 1 answer. She among those pots and snip and prune, | Is speaking of material worth, but I of and prune and snip. that other price that must be paid if High priced plants and rare slips|one would have continuously jine house she often indulged in, and as a rule|Plants. A trim and neut setting is no they usually die of ill-treatment—|more than plants deserve, and it is nothing less. And as a rule the florist | 2n ungrateful person indeed who does who furnished them gets the hlame. not give susrficient attention to secure 1 have told her many times how I|this. & ;‘nnnnge my plants. Not possessing MADGE. er conveniences ncr resources, I yet oo o : grow twice the number of flowers, al-| A PUDDING RECIPE WANTED. though no more pots. — % To my friend of the untidy window| Dear Soecial Corner Sisters:.I won- SOCIAL CORNER. home of Mrs. E. E. Swan Wednesday | next year, why can’t he teli us which r‘;lghl. uThere was a md(utlem}afl:& element that crop will find that soil e AR ™ small sum was real 0 apply to-lshort of, next year, so that we c: Mrs. Martha Gates Celebrates~ 82nd | varq the electric light fund for the A . ha Birthday—Grange Elects Officers— |chapel. ceived calls and a number of gifts. Hamburg, whe Grange Election. Master, Rev. F. Countryme; lecturer, | days. Robert Bingham, Sr.: secretary, Miss| W. R, Purple was a guest at W. AL les than s dekirall by dien ke e Dty s Gillette's the first of the week. T : Mrs, Marshall Miner was in Middle- | 008, Mme, carbon. etc. which corh f12" joum from mear Ithaca. thougn|AFe SOft. Serve with cream. May Countryman; treasurer, W. F. Palmer; oversee Charles Smith; steward, F. White. town Monday. Tape Social. A stape social under the auspices of the C. E. !oc?ty was held at P and Waste Baskets. designs. useful articles in Leather. and other leading brands. - at 25¢, 30c, 50c, 60c and $1.00. on the dollar. ' 25-27-29 BROARQWAY with fine_ success, s 1o \uA¢ ghe resuinr mestin of the granse | "Hichit Lo ing _tumiy ot the n the ratlon of 36:14:3 as in _the| A jimestone soll from Phaips, N. Y. | ULl Glean ‘swentening 4o tase. Pace ast Wednesday night officers were | Grassy Hill district have been visite = the o : i Slected for. ensuing vear as follows: | ing their relatives in.town for o, few| S ¢ Probortion of potash is slightly | ni 2, “Tng onty about thece Guarter | @ baking dish. Kill- the cores with st Would seem more simple and easy for | these two tests were involve. o in- | the fire; fold in the beaten whites; a generous box of beautiful holly from [ him. hese e e W. M. Gillette was im Hadlyme on|Mrs. I. Newton Cone, of Washington digation that the crop wanted more |3 & bak 1 the egss business the first of the week. state. The hollyjwas Mrs. Martha Gates celebrated her | Mrs. Cone’s yard. 82nd birthday last Friday. She re- |[marriage was Miss G’l;s:ce Bigelow . of tau, % s F gy e P agnumber of years | that these three chief fertilizing elc- | priscs of the test:—— apples, a little grated nutmes. Soalk New Zealand exported St > 1asses h v the |lons of whale ofl during 1914, very deficient in phosphorus as meas- | STODS o two veage A test plat with [anlt. molasees, Cut the bread very Help Yourself * work ut, i actice. Perh: i a ms dry in the morning add more To a Generous Supply of Gift Sugges- JIoii o™on™ Siciss Zemass it |boreany traceabie’ relntion whatover | Sogme @ry In the morning aa more tions By JuSt per“SiI\g This LiSt 9f According. to a recent bulletin of| 0 o oo paper. Select Articles From Our Various Departments. = No request, the bulletin states, i i igh! d frie: is stirred withi RICH MAHOGANY—In Tables, Lamps, Candlesticks, [ more otten made of the. statie Stnas | 525 37 grams. “On still Znoiher, the | neighbors and friends is stirre n PR ET ubabili o Mrs. Walter M. Gillette has received | L1US insure a good crop? Nothing |times as much nitrogen. Inr g0 far as|thin Syrup is formed: - remove rrom,u may be. the spirit is willing but the]out on Charies B. - first year's yield was 1S grams; the |them to the extent of .“speaking in |survived winter and ars budding up : ] = to have a sample of soil analyzed in 7 J meeting.” to bleom and bloom, is one of the fine Smoker’s Stands, Trays, Book Racks, Book Ends [ order to decermine whnt " sy2ea,in | second year's 79 grams. On six of the sights of sprice. How the neighbors will dote on that window. doir, desk, table and in many beautiful shapes and | ing power ot a given fctdr fher: Sither siable manwre or commes | (NS loto, sracsfut, (hrity plata, for. | knowing that o price has boen paid, LEATHER GOODS—OQur Hand Bags are of the very [|known waicn will sive such measire: | it "soen 2~ eisonms S maineat 1A best stock and workmanship, and the same may be [ basis for practice” At e uel waien 0t P A N said of our Pocket Books, Bill Folds, Card Cases, 21 ¥ield of all, 161 grams of dry erop- e Tourist Tablets, Stationery Cases, and ‘many other e e e aa . " 1 CHINAWARE that is rare, in pretty sets and many ele- ?":E;:,: b:,n !:e‘ wxry :m T ':é’g:é:'}:dfi: fi;ii?:':: ;}-‘iismz I‘GSII shn“'del-s from 9 to 11 anm, lb. I' 426 es what's in 1 - e r gant pieces. Chocolate Sets, Coffee Sefs, Trays, - §| whal’ i ite oror don't scom'to napa | S, ins Bosweee oon 52 ver /M SMOKED SHOULDERS, Ib. 1 6c Rl PR e ., Vases, Nappies, Plates, and all in the daintiest of B T ey, Sounly N pex NATIVE VEAL to roast, |b... patterns. Was Cightoen times hat ot the oty - - - ; \ &an Jou xpimin 1 im curamer |l Hamburg Steak, Ib_15¢|Beef Liver, Ib_.___10c|Lean Salt Pork, Ib__15¢ gt e g A \ (B 2 B RIB ROAST BEEF, Ib_____ ~_17c | LEAN CORNED BEEF, b 10 Coasters. ‘ i, s e s v B ROUND STEAK, Ib_._.___._20c | LEAN POT ROAST, Ib___. --12V3e " FINE STATIONERY—Not only fine but the very finest ,:,"mg":a:"“' would ao with and for & SLICED HAM, Ib_.__________30c | NATIVE VEAL to stew,lb._____12¢ in beautiful ribbon tied packages in Crane’s, Hurdl’s é‘;‘;:%}g'::“:“m"nk:g'::‘":{d LOIN LAMB GHOPS, Ib_ . ____25¢ | SMALL SAUSAGE, Ib_.______20c OTHER SUGGESTIONS ARE: Wallace Nutting Pictures, Sampler Calendars (be sure ; ot B B e T 7 JJLAMB, b.......... and see these), Van Buskirk’s Confections and Vantine ',:f,{n"’:fi‘;'”"figfi,;,fi?‘h.’fiz T COMPOUND . 10.JLOINS SPRING Perfumes, Beautifully Boxed Bulbs with appropriate Bl tse of commetice, hore is an eaty oen: | hiiany ind i ail simmare down to = e 3 JCILAMB, b. ......... verses, make nice gifts to send away, and we have these [MI| Peiivewaytoclearit: © L fover again, Hil you're probably tirsd 7 FORES SPRING Burrowes’ Folding Card Tables make home happier [§| 2oy asdsealticd and we carry a large assortment of Games. Remember we are closing out our Silverware at 66¢ Srs. "Cone before | !B 2 ton of shelled corn 35 pounds of {go naturally with Long Island sandy | sauce. ments are in the top soil of the acre |only 14 grams against a total of whipped cream or gustard sauce. which we're planning to plant to corn,| grams yielded by the ilar test plat] Chocolate Charlo:: Whites of five of a yellow clay loam from Chautau- | €883, two ounces usweetened choco- qua county which contained three ( late, one cup sugar, one-half cup wa- A times as much potash, twicc as much | ter, one teaspoon vanilla, Boil the supply the deflciency heforehand and phosphoric acid and almost three|Sugar, watet and ¢hocolate until a have I explzined again and again how |der if there is room in The Corner for necessary that dust should be kept|one more member? I have been read- from the foliage a the plants kept|ing the helpful letters for over a year in condition of perZect cleanliness, And |and would Lke to be one of you. Iam I believe that she understands tms|flcqunlnted with Tiddy Adily but have and mears well: but like many another 1Ot seen much of her since she won flesh is weak. Tidy: I bear you have a very nice This is not all. The untidy gardener | home on Windham road, but no chil- is not usually nice ahout wateriug and drenfll am blessed with both hcme her plants have imperfect arainage,|and dren. 2 often none at all. 'There is more sat-| Olive: I think I have met you. Didn't isfaction and pleasure_in three clcan, |¥ou once live fn Waterford healthry plants in respectahle pots upon | Wil someone send in a-racipe for 11 than in thirteen ill-|the old-fashioned cornmeal Laked pud- plants upon the finest|ding” S . 2 revolving flower stand the forist pos-|_ 1-0ve to all of the Frothers and sesses. Sisters. = Dust, spiders, green lice, scraggy BARZILLAIL branches, dead leaves, withered fiowers S —guard_against them and keep your| CLUB NO. 3 INQUIRED FOR. picked from |, .¢ finds, for example. that there are | nifrogen, potash and phosphate than |are set. Serve cold with custard nitrogen, 14 pounds of phosphorus, 8|Joam is strons. Appfe Tapioca: Three-quarters cup in various | POUnds of potash, etc. He also finds| But now observe some of the sur- | tapioca, one ‘quart water, sugar, six ments in your soil, instead of being the tapioca and boill it in the water corn, are in the ratio of 3 That though containing less than half the |2nd core the apples and place them in Toss han it of Phosphoorus. greatly | o Shosphates of a. sandstone . ssil|S4T: DOUr the taploca around them little .nutmeg over the other elements euch as silicon, iron, than five times as heavy a crop. & |top. Cover and bake until the apples lants, few or many. trim and thrifty. P e S B L ax 3. Dear Soical Cerner Sisters: Fust o with you there. 1 know you can,|feW lines to welcome Merry Andrew What ‘one woman can do others may "“{,- ot hle Corner Come again. attempt. Face about, examine those ml“:]"lf‘ea")‘c plants you have in your windows. X Look them over every day. and water | Oy Fae the vellow how. and snip and shower. Failure or neg- omelia: .- Glad to meet. o1 lect in daily duty wiil - be written | YOUr mother at the cliurch supper: § aganst you. a few Social Corner Si: ors a(’;hr ta- Do not complain of lack of time. I? “’:‘-v, Did Jou ape llhe < : you have time for flowers at all, you| Where is e O R er3acand What have time to treat them well. And do 278 they by e to meet this not grow more thon you can care for. | Winter? If so, should like to meet with 2 y s 2o | you. The thrifty little zerunium with its Wheo is Who? GEORGIETTE' DAUGHTER. contains in small quantities, your sofl } ; o is 50 full that there's no need of any [ SoN(aining less than half the potash| Bread Pudding: Three day ola it i h than a heavier clay loam from near | bread, butter, sugar, cinnamon, all- 44,628 gal- | sonl s f;‘égéh'fiz°,‘5§'l§?'o§h3.§é’s’f. ?.,‘3 Geneva, produced one-third higger | SPice, chopped raisins, milk, pinch of = a9 7 = thin: butter it; put a layer in the ured by corn-Gemand. ~What more | PnIY d;zubxl):rtlfeen;idd T Two Yonrs af | Pudding dish, add susur, & pinch of lomieal, at firat_thausht. thab- toiads o OO e 1o pot- |#llspice and 'cinnamon, a grating of gume that the addition-at a little pot- |2 JIMEAS Blat, conbilning per cent. of | Putmeg 2nd a handful of raisins. Add ash »nd a good deal of phosphate to [ RN produced twice as heavy a yield | further layers until the dish is fall, Your feld will eoable the soll aireagy | 302 SPICARES O per cent. of lime. A |finishing with a layer of bread. Heat rich enough in nitrogen, xro’h, lime, plat with oniy .063 per cent of nitro- |the milk, add a pinch of salt and smcm_x, ::tc., to grow a whorping crop n produced a third bigger-yield than | Nough moclasses to color it percepti- of corn? ::e wibh .185 per cent. of nitrogen. bly. Pour slowly over the mass, con- : b In fact, the carefil tables of the ex- | tinuing until by gently pressing the Nothing would sesm more logicai | perimenter show that mot a single one |Pread the' milk can be seen. Cover #|3nd, natural. Nevertheless, the theory [of the eleven fertilizing elementg Lig|With 2 plate and leave in a moder- don’t and won't and can’t te made to ! gay blossom so bright and smiiing to greet you in the morning or when you = ately warm place over might. If it P analysis disclosed in the various sails | 2tely P! i o ek ,‘;‘:m-’;'i‘;‘o;gm‘;g‘fi*; An American automatic telephbne b I s | System has been established in Simla, the summe rcapftal of India. ve time to care for the geranium does” not work. i £ or four hours. Keep covered with But greater surprises, vet, remain to plate for two hours: then cover with The untidy window gardencr does not as a rule place her pots well. They Grw 10 moatecr D A L Loy eadaches Usually it ;¢ a crowded appearance, the foliage touches, overlaps and of- ten wilts and dies. come m: from disorders of Plants need freedom other living things to do well. ‘Give them thut fl’l h lxd)zels. freedom and rejoice in thelr glaa| Regulate aemgnsan eep growih and beauty. free from headaches by using A window of fine piants that have the New York Agvicultural Experi-| The same crop, barley, was growr. RASTER, LALY. ment Station a great many farmers |for tvo successive years Want measurements of the fertility Of | sorl piats. moth veave mitiaer ey 3® | THE UNTIDY WINDOW GARDENER their soi's, so that they may “deter- tilization whatever, even the water S mine for any given soil its capacity used being distilled to prevent acci- Dear Social Corner- Sisters: There o oustaln plant productlon and its |dental addition of some micrascopical | are peodle who allow their window deficiencies that should be met throvgh Mmanuring. On one plat the HSrs gardens to hecome so untily that the the application of fertilizing material.” | yield was 11 the second | Patience and even the temper of .their nine test plats the seeond year's crop | I 8m dcquainted with lady who should be used to suppiement its weak | o} 5 has means, time, stre; south pay How pass- places, and to what crop or erone iy | Fithout any fertilization, either year, ngt! L 2 s larger than the first 1 | window and other qualities that go to{ersby will nod and gaze. How friends is adapted.” There seems, the bulle~ ;}:ww‘f:rme = ltl xehron?anr"- these | make up an amateur florist. = Yet her | will sigh and wish they had been Plus tin goes on, to be a wide impression plats was taken f a fleld whicy | plants tire me every time I eee them. |more careful when that dreadful cold c that mere laboratory methods can 4 ig] She allows them to become scruggy | night in March came round. And all ELECTRIC LAMPS—For many different uses, for bou- [ settie “just what procedure shoula e | 230 1een cleared eigk:ty years, and on | 5! growth, neglesting. to prune and|the while the owner smiles serenely, | Lagest Sals of Any Modiciae in the World. Sold everywhers, In bomes, 10c, 25¢. | which, during all that time, no fertil- adopted to increase the cial, had ever b used. Its 2 getting, I "suppose, the little' maxim, My friend and I often compare notes, o peralsia ‘o‘},"e“‘_‘f{.‘m!dezfl:&d Sielas pad been from 100 o150 Dagh n state v - ot frankly and emphatically that—now | oiyes PoAI08S Per acre; 30 bushels please note this,- Thowis 'a on o hay . T woeat, and ‘e Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps. Ask For Them ©0 methods of analysis are now That is, the thing which, theoreti. cally. ought to be as simple as roliing g;nfilf,:,m:;“y.:flkwm pr‘;g 3 A i ft 2 log lsn't really smple at all, but[gures the vers coalts crop of all, 3 7 ;: a protolv.mg1 mystery, thus far nt. $ 1.2 grams. Yet the nlu‘ogen-phu-' . 2 c:x‘;z;tx:rmbm n:e ?y test ‘tube and mi, phorus-potash content of the two =ofis The thing which one might think | W3S, 21most identical. The Ithaca dirt F LEAN PORK CHOPS, Ib. .. and-iry and then cut-and-try again,” While it may be a matter of some curiggity ‘to know what our dirt is made of, our practical interest lies in finding out what it will do. And the of hearing it, viz. that each field must 3 romain for ten minutes. Then wash off wit Bosfoot | be: troated 15 @ SepaYALe probiem g A LAMB, Ib......... Soap and het water, Finish with a of clear, |askea, not only sce but many times, - mlinmtcdm\h::n. Do this regularly, | wiBht it wants grow and what i m'”""""{'“" : ”’d’wfifi the way h:' ..:udsmme. I y tendency It answer honestly every time. complexion clear, fresh and But vou've got to put the questions intelligent!: and - you've got to use somc brains and rely a good deal on e nee to read the answer right. ou” put a spoonful of séda into a glass any cld vinegar, made out of anything and beought anywhere, and it'll fizz up and feam over. can't put a ton of fertilizer, regard- e . every time. 5 ANT t5 put bus- he wotical rule - SRR (1 At e S R L TRk '#;:iu columns of The -1 Get Four dirt o tell ?m;vm ot o -9 ; ] v less of what it is. on a patch .of soil, CRANSTON T \ Y d x beil over with corn and cabbage

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